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Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Videogame Review, 3D Billiards for the Playstation 5 (PS5)

Videogame Review, 3D Billiards for the Playstation 5 (PS5)


The game of pool can be a source for bad habits.  If you remember old Disney movies, you know this.  My big brother even had a party for some game of pool and two players in their grey hairs were enjoying a sport of pretend under foul mannerism.  A Nintendo Gamecube did wonders for pool.  So, where does this Playstation 5 game go in a rating?  Not so high.  Or, rather, it’s not so hot.  3D Billiards plays like an average PC game with a little 4K TV mixed in.  An experienced PC gamer knows what that means!  Consider the gameplay.  It’s a tiny spark for our entertainment industry and includes very few words, features, and options.  The game rooms have some fantasy out of boredom.  You can hear “ghosts” talking in the game rooms.  They’re not really ghosts; they’re just a careless audience of laughter and vanity, just like me, for this case.  Controls depends on a mixture of aggression and accuracy that requires fighting with the thumbsticks.  It’s not fun to play, it’s just ordinary amusement.  Looking at my equipment for the sport is hard on the eyes and colors mix and match at random according to camera angles of 3D within disorderly fashion of gaming by both viewership and experience.  The computer opponents are not organized into proper slots and their skills don’t match with labels of stars that should’ve indicated skill levels for real and can’t have.  You do get a variety of pool “orbs” with flashing glitter and wonder of design.  Each game room has plenty of space although the pool players hardly move around much to begin with.  A white ball connects to other balls for pockets or the simple miss.  Music for the game doesn’t ring a bell for me since the music sounds like the kind of music a boss plays to kick customers out of his restaurant.  So, what’s all the laughter and cheer from the “ghosts” for?  Even if we’re to consider skill, 3D Billiards lets you control a “mighty” character in the beginning of a tournament, and, were skills to matter for the PS5 game, I would continue beating opponents with ease until the very end.  Difficulty does not get interesting until the very last match of each tournament.  Scratch that.  A “tournament” is only a menu of options to complete games for new avatars who look humorous and play too slow or too fast.  Pool Paradise for the Nintendo Gamecube is a great video game with depth and big, wild fantasy.  3D Billiards for the Playstation 5 is a quick excuse for a cheap thrill.  Not everything in 4K TV goes unnoticed.  The game rooms do have styles that suggest shopping and dining under the sun.  A decent amount of detail reveal 4K TV’s sharpness and contrast of shades between minimal effects of power.  My aim for the pockets is efficient and tiresome when holes connect of obvious physics.  Playing with the PS5 controller for 3D Billiards has not necessarily been comfortable.  Pushing a button takes practice even if the practice remains for less function and more crazy thought.  Favors are not well with the pool game and my senses kick in for dull interest.  It’s fine to have a basic desire, I just really need something more powerful in viewpoint and fantasy.  In the modern age, it’s still difficult for a programmer to put characters in a game room and I feel a bit near the simplicity of pool on where complicated matters vanish into choice rules.  Here, for 3D Billiards, I don’t really feel like I have made a discovery of “choice” and the PS5 game plays average on volume.  You’ll see a sign that says “Nachos”.  Honestly, I want nachos instead.  This is boring!




https://www.deviantart.com/gameuniverso/art/Review-of-3D-Billiards-Playstation-5-882838651

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